April 3, 2014

The United States Supreme Court continued the pro-Big Business conservative Republican majority’s drive to remove Legislative Branch limits on political money, effectively granting unlimited rights to rich people and corporations to continue polluting American politics with their vast riches built up mainly during the Bush years.

The high court struck down the two-year ceilings that Congress has imposed on an individual’s donations to presidential and congressional candidates, parties and some political action groups, by a five-to-four vote.

The majority opinion, written and delivered by Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., claimed that corruption in politics will be kept in check by caps on how much each single donation can be. Removing the ceilings on the total amounts that may given in each election cycle will not undermine those limits, Roberts said.

Richard Trumka, AFL-CIO

In a quick reaction to the ruling in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said the court made “one of the most undemocratic and corrosive decisions in history with the Citizens United ruling.”

The court “has dangerously broadened its skewed view of money in politics,” Trumka said. “By striking down individual aggregate limits on First Amendment grounds, the Court has further tilted our political system in favor of corporations and the wealthy and against working people. Our founding fathers did not intend for our electoral process to be the façade for political auctions.

“We need fundamental reform to get our democracy back on track,” he added. “The average, ordinary American should have as strong a voice as the Koch brothers do in politics.”

The decision was not as sweeping as the Court’s ruling four years ago, removing all restrictions on what corporations and labor unions can spend of their own money in federal campaigns (Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission), which has led to billions of dollars spent on politics through financing that is supposed to be independent of candidates or parties. The new ruling leaves that option open if a donor does not want to directly support a candidate or a party committee and stay within the per-donation caps.

The practical result of the new ruling, however, is almost sure to be that wealthy individuals favoring specific candidates or party positions will be able to spread their money around among more candidates and political groups and continue influencing American politics in a way that is bad for workers and the economy at large.

Donors will get into legal trouble only if they demand a specific favor in the form of legislation or federal policy in a direct exchange for the money they give. That is the only kind of corruption that the First Amendment will allow the government to attack.

The Chief Justice’s opinion said that other recent changes in campaign finance law will work to reduce the risks of abuses. It offered other ideas for new limits that it implied might be constitutional. Whether the votes are there in Congress to pass any of those suggestions, however, is doubtful.

Although the Roberts opinion spoke only for himself and three other justices, Justice Clarence Thomas said he agreed with the ruling, making a majority for eliminating the two-year ceilings. Thomas said he would have gone even further to free up even more donations in federal campaigns. He would have overruled a 1976 decision (Buckley v. Valeo) that gives contributions less constitutional protection than spending during campaigns. He also added that the Roberts opinion “continues to chip away” at the 1976 decision’s foundations.

The Roberts opinion was supported in full by Justices Samuel A. Alito, Jr., Anthony M. Kennedy and Antonin Scalia. Justice Stephen G. Breyer wrote for the dissenters, and orally announced the dissenters’ reasoning in a presentation that ran longer than the Chief Justice’s announcement of the ruling. Breyer’s opinion was joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Elena Kagan, and Sonia Sotomayor.

The ruling will go into effect, formally, in 25 days unless the Court were to take the rare step of agreeing to reconsider it. So it seems sure to operate through the months remaining in this year’s congressional campaigns, and for the presidential campaign in 2016, likely to begin in 2015. The ruling applies directly to federal elections, since the case centered on a federal law. Eight states have similar ceilings on total contributions, though, so those, too, may be affected by the Constitutional ruling.

The per-donation limits now in effect that the Court did not disturb are $2,600 per election to a candidate (with primary and general elections treated separately), $32,400 per year to a national party committee, $10,000 per year to a state or local party committee, and $5,000 per year to a regular political action committee. That cap does not apply to the new “Super PACs” that only spend independently and do not give money to candidates.

What the Court struck down were these two-year ceilings that would have been operating during 2013 and 2014: $48,600 to federal candidates and $74,600 to political action committees (PACs). Of that $74,600, no more than $48,600 can be donated to state and local party committees and PACs.

These so-called “aggregate limits,” Chief Justice Roberts said, “have the effect of restricting how many candidates or committees the donor may support, to the extent permitted by the base limits.”

The ruling came in the case of an Alabama businessman, Shaun McCutcheon, who sued (along with the Republican National Committee) because the two-year limits stopped him from giving anything to added candidates or political panels once his donations had reached the ceilings. He said he had no objection to keeping each specific donation within the so-called “base limits.” Curbing the number of candidates he could support, he and the Republicans argued, infringed on his right to engage in political expression.

The Court majority agreed. The main opinion summed up this way.

“An aggregate limit on how many candidates and committees an individual may support through contributions is not a modest restraint at all. The government may no more restrict how many candidates or causes a donor may support than it may tell a newspaper how many candidates it may endorse.”

Although the Court did not concede that it was creating constitutional donation opportunities only for the wealthy, the two-year caps as a practical reality probably would never apply to those with more limited financial means.

In fact, the main opinion implied that it referred to big-money donors with the language that “the government may not penalize an individual for robustly exercising his First Amendment rights.” It cited the notion from a ruling it had made six years ago striking down a limit on millionaire candidates who used their own money to pay for their own campaigns for Congress.

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